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Qatar

Acclaimed Spanish flamenco dancer performs at Katara

Published: 10 Oct 2019 - 08:00 am | Last Updated: 08 Nov 2021 - 02:09 am
Belen Alfaro, Ambassador of Spain to Qatar, speaks before the start of “Las Pequeñas Cosas” flamenco dance show at Katara Opera House on Tuesday.

Belen Alfaro, Ambassador of Spain to Qatar, speaks before the start of “Las Pequeñas Cosas” flamenco dance show at Katara Opera House on Tuesday.

Raynald C Rivera | The Peninsula

Minute details not everyone can see form the essence of flamenco in “Las Pequeñas Cosas” (The Little Things), featuring acclaimed Spanish flamenco dancer Ursula Lopez who mesmerised an august audience with her captivating performance at Katara Opera House on Tuesday.

Bringing Lopez’s more than 25 years of experience onstage, the show was indeed a spectacular showcase of flamenco — one of Spain’s cultural treasures inscribed in Unesco’s Masterpieces of the Oral and Intangible Heritage of Humanity. From graceful and delicate twisting of the palms to intense stamping of the feet in perfect rhythm, Lopez unveiled flamenco in its purest form as she delivered an artistic feat everyone in the audience is sure to remember for a long time.

For over an hour, the audience was taken to an exciting journey through various emotions and landscapes by  Lopez accompanied by Javier Patino on guitar, Raul Dominguez Soto on percussion and Gema Caballero on vocals. 

In its strictest sense, flamenco pertains to an art form tracing its roots to folkloric music traditions of Andalusia, Extremadura and Murcia in Southern Spain. 

It is an artistic expression of a range of feelings and states of mind achieved through the amalgam of song, dance and music performed in different occasions and has been passed on from generation to generation. Over the past two centuries, flamenco has witnessed development into more modern musical styles.

“Flamenco is a very important part of Spanish culture. It’s also a dance that has some kind of Arabic influence and which in 2010 was named as a world heritage treasure,” said Belen Alfaro, Ambassador of Spain to Qatar.
The ambassador stressed the deep historical connection of Spain with the Arab world and expressed hope the event would further bolster the cultural relations between Spain and Qatar.

“Spain has a very rich history of connections with the Arab world. We have many cities in Spain with very important Arabic architecture-in Granada, Cordoba and Seville just to mention a few. I hope this event will help strengthen cultural ties relations between Qatar and Spain,” she said, while thanking Katara for helping make the event possible.

Born in Cordoba, Lopez began formal dancing training at a young age graduating both in classical Spanish dance and ballet and travelling to Seville to pursue studies in flamenco under the tutelage of great masters.
She has travelled the world performing in major festivals which have been met with great success among critics and audience earning her accolades.  

She has featured in shows in various  cities in Russia, Ukraine, Romania, Amsterdam, Moldova, Indonesia, Vietnam and Malaysia, among others.